The General's Briefing

Hilerie Lind

A podcast where Black feminist analysis meets cultural commentary. This is your command center for understanding the systems that shape Black life, Black love, and Black survival. Each episode is a strategic briefing on the forces we're up against and the tools we need to fight back. From the "Sacrificial Bargain" that polices Black women's bodies and choices, to the "Faustian Bargain" that questions Black men's authenticity, we're breaking down the vernacular theories that govern how we judge success, navigate trauma, and protect, or abandon, each other.

  1. 1d ago

    Heaux Tales

    This episode is about the body. Who owns it. Who controls it. Who profits from it when we can't say no. And what it sounds like when Black women finally refuse. I connect the RSV lawsuit to the 105th anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre, where the state bombed Black economic bodies into silence, and to the 1985 MOVE bombing in Philadelphia, where the city dropped a bomb on a Black radical community and killed five children. These are not isolated incidents. They are chapters in the same book. The book that says: Black bodies are raw material. Black bodies are expendable. Black bodies do not belong to themselves. I analyze Aaliyah as the foil , the Black woman who never got to refuse. Surrounded by men who claimed her body, her image, and her story from the time she was a teenager, Aaliyah died at 22 and the men who surrounded her are still telling her story for her. My dissertation framework identifies this as the Pygmalion Dynamic, success tied to a powerful male patron, and Community Complicity, when the community protects male transgressors at the expense of Black women. Aaliyah never got to write her own Heaux Tales. And that is not just a tragedy. It is evidence. And then I turn to Jasmine Sullivan. Heaux Tales (2021) is not just an album. It is a Black feminist text. It is structured like a dissertation, opening with the testimonies of real women speaking in their own voices, building to songs that reclaim Black women's right to own their bodies, their desire, and their story. "Pick Up Your Feelings" is emotional refusal. "On It" featuring Ari Lennox is the reclamation of pleasure. Together, they form what my dissertation calls the Philosophy of Refusal, the deliberate, conscious refusal of the Sacrificial Bargain in all its forms.

    30 min

About

A podcast where Black feminist analysis meets cultural commentary. This is your command center for understanding the systems that shape Black life, Black love, and Black survival. Each episode is a strategic briefing on the forces we're up against and the tools we need to fight back. From the "Sacrificial Bargain" that polices Black women's bodies and choices, to the "Faustian Bargain" that questions Black men's authenticity, we're breaking down the vernacular theories that govern how we judge success, navigate trauma, and protect, or abandon, each other.